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In a previous post I showed how to create expression trees to set properties on an object. The way I did it was not very developer friendly. It involved explicitly creating the necessary expressions because the compiler won’t generate expression trees...
Following my last posts ( > )( > ), in this post I’ll introduce the implementation of the SkipLastWhile operator. The SkipLastWhile returns all but the last contiguous elements from a a sequence that satisfy the specified criteria and is implemented...
Following my last post , in this post I’ll introduce the implementation of the SkipLast operator. The SkipLast operator returns all but a specified number of contiguous elements from the end of a sequence and is implemented as the SkipLast extension method...
After having introduced the TakeLast operators ( > )( > )( > ), it makes sense to introduce their duals: the SkipLast operators. Name Description Example SkipLast<TSource>(IEnumerable<TSource>) Returns all but a specified number of...
Following my last posts ( > )( > ), in this post I’ll introduce the implementation of the TakeLastWhile operator. The TakeLastWhile operator returns last contiguous elements from a sequence that satisfy the specified criteria and is implemented...
Following my last post , in this post I’ll introduce the implementation of the TakeLast operator. The TakeLast operator returns a specified number of contiguous elements from the end of a sequence and is implemented as the TakeLast extension method :...
Some time ago I needed to retrieve the last items of a sequence that satisfied some criteria and, looking at the operators available in the Enumerable class, I noticed that there wasn’t such operator. The only way to achieve this was to reverse the sequence...
I’ve created a project on CodePlex to share my LINQ utilities and operators: PauloMorgado.Linq In this project you can find the code from my previous posts about the Distinct operator: LINQ: Enhancing Distinct With The PredicateEqualityComparer LINQ:...
To finalize this series on object hydration, I’ll show some performance comparisons between the different methods of hydrating objects. For the purpose of this exercise, I’ll use this class: class SomeType { public int Id { get ; set ; } public string...
In my previous post I showed how to hydrate objects by creating instances and setting properties in those instances. But, if the intent is to hydrate the objects from data, why not having an expression that does just that? That’s what the member initialization...
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